Category: Meetings

  • AFC Winter 2000 meeting

    AFC Winter 2000

    January 7th 2000

    Scientific Programme

    Session 1

    Shedding light on immunity to mycobacteria
    VA Snewin, DJ Turner, M-P Gares and DB Young

    Rapid detection of M. tuberculosis infection by enumeration of antigen specific T cells.
    Ajit Lalvani, Ansar A Pathan, Helen McShane, Robert J Wilkinson, Mohammed Latif,
    Christopher P Conlon, Geoffrey Pasvol & Adrian VS Hill

    Generation of mycobacterial mutants using plasmid incompatibility
    C. Pashley, RA McAdam, K Duncan, T Parish, NG Stoker

    Do chemokines differ in skin lesions across the leprosy spectrum?
    AA Kirkaldy, S Khanolkhar-Young, S Suneetha & D Lockwood

    The Biology of Anti-tuberculosis Drug Resistance
    Stephen H Gillespie , Owen Billington, Timothy D McHugh

    Session 2

    Plasmid Transfer from Streptomyces to Mycobacteria smegmatis
    Apoorva Bhatt and Tobias Kieser

    Differential Trafficking of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis 19 kDa antigen and access to the MHC Class I processing Pathway
    Olivier Neyrolles, Marie-Pierre Gares, Keith Gould, Sara Brett, Peadar O’Gaora, Marie-Christine Prevost, Emmanuelle Perret, Riny Janssen, Jelle Thole & Douglas Young

    Pre-BCG Immune Responses to Mycobacterial Antigens in a Malawian Population
    Gill Black

    Demonstration of adherence of mycobacteria to a human respiratory tissue organ culture by electron microscopy
    AM Middleton, MV Chadwick, AJ Nicholson, A Dewar, R Wilson

    The study of environmentally regulated genes in mycobacteria species using bioluminescence
    Jamila Shafi, Peter Andrew, Kenneth Duncan & Ruth McAdam

    Examination of clinical and archaeological material using PCR primers that can detect low levels of Mycobacterium leprae DNA
    Helen D Donoghue, John M Holton and Mark Spigelman

     

  • AFC Winter 1998 meeting

    AFC Winter 1998

    Held at the National Institute for Medical Research, London

    January 8th 1998

    Scientific Programme

    Session 1

    Interactions between mycobacteria and macrophages: changes in expression of genes in oxidative metabolism and apoptosis
    Ragno S, Jenner P and Colston MJ. The National Institute of Medical Research, London

    Mycobacterial mutants defective in oxygen-limited stationary phase survival
    Keer JT and Williams HD. Imperial College, London

    Dormancy and Social resuscitation- the identification of a molecular wake-up call
    Kell DB, Mukamolova G, Kaprelyants A , Danielle Young and Mike Young. University of Aberystwyth

    The strengths and weaknesses of 16S rRNA sequencing in mycobacterial systematics
    Goodfellow M, Magee JG, Ward AC and Mhen H-S. University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne and PHLS Newcastle

    Molecular fingerprinting: the Mycobacterium malmoense story, so far
    Magee JG, Shojaei H, Freeman R and Goodfellow M. PHLS Newcastle and University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne

    Regulation of mycobacterial promoters
    McBride AJA, Eales L-J, Dale JW and McFadden JJ. University of Surrey

    Vaccinia expression of Mycobacterium tuberculosis Antigen 85 and ESAT-6 secreted proteins: tissue plasminogen activator signal sequence enhances expression and immunogenicity
    Malin AS, Huygen K, Content J, Mackett M, Brandt L, Andersen P and Dockrell HM. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

    Session 2

    Chemokine networks in pulmonary tuberculosis
    Friedland J. Imperial College School of Medicine at Hammersmith, London

    Investigation of human immunity to tuberculosis: development of a whole blood killing assay
    Kampmann B, Ó Goara P, Snewin V, Levin M and Douglas Young, Imperial College School of Medicine at St Mary’s, London

    The first clinical study of rifapentine/isoniazid in continuation phase treatment, carried out in Hong Kong
    Mitchison DA, Tam CM, Chan SL, Lam CW, Leung CC, Kam KM and Norris JS. St Georges Hospital Medical School, London

    Two unusual patients with asthma requiring treatment with steroids, and chronic pulmonary infection with M. xenopi. The clinical and immunological outcomes following immunotherapy
    Thapa N, Stanford J. University College London Medical School

    Characteristics of protective T cells after DNA vaccination or tuberculosis infection in mice
    Lowrie DB. The National Institute of Medical Research, London

  • AFC Summer 1997 meeting

    AFC Summer 1997

    Held at the Sanger Centre, Cambridge

    July 17th-18th 1997

    Scientific Programme

    Session 1
    The involvement of the Wellcome Trust in bacterial genome sequencing
    John Stephenson. Wellcome Trust

    Sequencing of the Mycobacterium tuberculosis genome
    Bart Barrell. Sanger Centre

    Analysis of mycobacterial genomes
    Stewart Cole. Institut Pasteur, Paris

    Use of whole genome sequence of Haemophilus influenzae to investigate the biology of LPS
    Richard Moxon. IMM, John Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford

    Session 2

    From genomics to targets and vaccines
    Ken Duncan. Glaxo Wellcome, Stevenage

    Comparative genome sequencing the pstS operon of Mycobacterium intracellulare, M.leprae and M.tuberculosis
    Harry Thangaraj. RPMS, Hammersmith, London

    A genome-wide search for genes involved in host susceptibility to human tuberculosis
    R Bellamy et al. WellcomeTrust for Human Genomics, Oxford ; MRC, Gambia

    Glycosyltransferases in mycobacteria: polyprenol-phosphomannose biosynthesis as an entry point
    Paul R Wheeler. LSHTM, London

    Use of yeast genome information
    Johannes Hegemann. Justus-Liebig-Univ., Giessen, Germany

    Session 3

    Mycobacterial systematics: strengths and weaknesses of 16S rRNA sequencing
    John Magee & Mike Goodfellow. PHLS, Newcastle upon Tyne

    A porin-like gene of M. tuberculosis
    R Senaratne et al. NIMR, London

    Proteome analysis of microbial pathogens: applications and challenges
    David O’Connor. Southampton University

    Workshop 1: Bioinformatics

    Lead Speaker: To be arranged

    Antibiotic resistance: efflux genes in M. tuberculosis
    Marian Blokpoel. Imperial College, London

    Identification of MPT53, a novel secreted antigen of M. tuberculosis
    Steve Michell. CVL, Weybridge

    Finding families for orphan genes
    Mark Pallen. Imperial College, London

    Identification of potentially glycosylated mycobacterial lipoproteins
    R Delahay. Imperial College, London

    The WHO synthetic peptide initiative for new leprosy skin test reagents- the use of bioinformatics
    To be arranged

    Open discussion and short informal presentations

    Workshop 2: Gene Function

    Lead Speaker: Douglas Young. Imperial College, London

    A novel approach to the trapping of activated promoters; promoter self-amplification
    G Bachrach. NIMR, London

    Upregulation of the M. tuberculosis haemoglobin-like hmp gene mRNA during entry into dormancy
    A Coates. St Georges, London

    Proteome maps from M. tuberculosis during infection
    PD Butcher. St Georges, London

    Open discussion and short informal presentations

    Plenary session

    Report back and discussion Panel
    Jo Colston (chair), John Stephenson, Neil Stoker, Jeremy Dale, Douglas Young

    Summary
    Jo Colston

  • AFC Winter 1997 meeting

    AFC Winter 1997

    Held at The Royal London Hospital

    January 31st 1997

    Scientific Programme

    Session 1

    Clinical problems of tuberculosis control in East London
    Bothamley, G. and Cotton, M. Homerton Hospital

    The molecular epidemiology of tuberculosis in HIV positive and negative populations in Northern Tanzania
    Gillespie, S.M., Ramsay,A.R.C., Uiso, L., Ironogo, C.H, Ipuge, M.H, Dickens, A., Newport, L.E. and McHugh, T.D. Royal Free Hospital, Kibongoto TB Hospital, and TB and Leprosy Control Programme, Tanzania

    Stationary phase survival in mycobacteria
    Williams, H.D. Imperial College, London

    Unusual morphology of mycobacteria cultured under microaerobic and anaerobic conditions
    Cunningham, A.F. and Spreadbury, C.L. University of Birmingham

    T cell responses to a mixture of M. tuberculosis peptides with complementary HLA-DR binding profiles
    Jurzevic, S., Wilkinson, R.J., Hills, A., Pasvol, G, Davidson, R.N. and Ivanyi, J. Hammersmith Hospital, and Northwick Park Hospital

    A longitudinal study of in vitro cytotoxic T cell and IFNg responses of tuberculosis patients in The Gambia
    Turner, J. and Dockrell, H.M. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

    Session 2

    IS6110 evolution in Mycobacterium tuberculosis
    Forbes, K. and Fang, Z. Aberdeen University

    Transposition of IS6110 in Mycobacterium smegmatis
    Ghanekar, K., Wall, S., Dale, J. and McFadden, J.J. University of Surrey

    Glucocorticoids and acute pulmonary tuberculosis: a clue to pathogenesis
    Baker, R.W., Shaw, R.J., Rook, G.A.W., Zumla, A., Lightman, S., Walker, B. and Honour, J.
    St. Mary’s Hospital and Middlesex Hospital, University College London, Bristol University and Edinburgh University

    Aspects of recA expression in mycobacteria
    Davis, E.O., Movahedzadeh, F., Papavinasundaram, K., Thomas, N., Jenner, P.J., Brooks, P.C. and Colston, M.J. National Institute of Medical Research. London

    Studies on phage infection in mycobacteria utilising iron compounds to inactivate the macrophage
    McNerney, R., Harley, V., Sidu, A., Stupple, A., Tovey, G., Parish, T. and Stoker, N. London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine

    Epidemiological surveillance of tuberculosis in East London and The City
    O’Sullivan, J. Homerton Hospital

  • AFC Summer 1996 meeting

    AFC Summer 1996

    Held at Glaxo-Wellcome, Stevenage

    July 5th 1996

    Scientific Programme

    Session 1: Mini-symposium – Mycobacterial molecular biology applications: epidemiology and enzyme targets
    Guest speakers:

    TB in a high-risk community: what can we learn?
    Prof. Paul van Helden, University of Stellenbosch, South Africa

    DNA repair in the mycobacteria
    Prof. Valerie Mizrahi SAIMR, Johannesburg, South Africa

    Work being done at Stevenage:

    High density gridded mycobacterial genomic libraries
    S. Martin and K. Hussem

    Natural substitution of a key residue in mycobacterial PEP:UDP-N acetylglucosamine transferase
    K. Duncan, K Kempsell, D. Kim, W. Lees and C.T. Walsh. Glaxo Wellcome Research & Development and Harvard Medical School

    Session 2

    Sequential antibody responses to Mycobacterium bovis antigens in badgers
    Diane Newell, Chris Cheeseman& Richard Clifton Hadley. CVL and CSL, Weybridge

    The implication of PstS genes in mycobacterial pathogenesis
    Harry Thangaraj. RPMS, Hammersmith, London

    Double double coil and trouble: plasmid replication in mycobacteria
    Pelle Stolt. LSHTM, London

    Influence of non-MHC genes on immune responses to mycobacterial stress proteins
    J. Ivanyi, F. Wahid, S. Carmen & T. Aitman. RPMS, Hammersmith, London

    Session 3

    Mycobacterial viability and cytology studied with membrane and lipid fluorescence probes
    M.R. Barer, R. Cooney, P. Ibrahim, N.J. Garton, H. Christensen & D.E. Minnikin. University of Newcastle

    Towards determining the cellular functions of mycobacterial acyl-CoA carboxylase
    Anabela Medo Miranda, Elizabeth Norman & Jeremy Dale (University of Surrey)

    Nucleic acid vaccination for protection against M. tuberculosis
    X. Zhu, N. Venkataprasad, H. Thangaraj & H.M. Vordermeier. RPMS, Hammersmith, LOndon
    Differential gene expression of mycobacteria inside macrophages: analysis of mRNA
    P.D. Butcher, J.A. Mangan, I.M. Monahan, M.S. Li & D.K Banerjee. St George’s Hospital Medical School, London